Thanks, Eric. Good morning, everyone. I want to take a few minutes to walk through not just what happened this quarter or this year, but how we think about this business and where we are taking it. The numbers matter, and I will get to them, but I want to start with the architecture, because the architecture is what makes the numbers durable. American Bitcoin launched in March 2025, went public through completing our reverse merger with Gryphon Digital Mining in September, held our first earnings call in November, and as of year-end, held approximately 5,400 Bitcoin in reserve. Likewise, our Satoshis per share stood at 554 at the end of the fourth quarter, up from 371 at the end of the third quarter. That is a 49% increase in a single quarter. Our focus is on building the Bitcoin reserve over time and enhancing per-share exposure alongside it. Those results reflect the iterated layers of our business model. I will walk through each, cover our financial results, and then share where we are headed. The foundation of American Bitcoin is industrial-scale Bitcoin mining, anchored in the United States and powered primarily by American energy. Installed capacity at year-end was approximately 25 exahash per second, with fleet efficiency of approximately 16.3 J/TH. During the fourth quarter, we mined 783 Bitcoin, bringing production since ABTC's launch to approximately 1,654 Bitcoin. Approximately one-third of our total Bitcoin reserve has been accumulated directly through mining. That is not incidental. Mining produces Bitcoin at a structural discount to what it would cost to acquire on the open market. That discount is the economic engine of this business. We decreased our cost of revenue per Bitcoin mined to approximately $46.9 thousand in the fourth quarter, compared to approximately $50.2 thousand in the third quarter. We added no net new hash rate in the fourth quarter by design. The focus was optimization, stabilizing machines from the third quarter ramp, tuning fleet performance, and managing intelligent curtailment around ERCOT energy pricing signals. A similar stabilization dynamic occurred between the second and the third quarter, when margins improved as more efficient machines came online and earlier capacity normalized. That step change was tied to that specific deployment cycle and should not be viewed as a recurring pattern. The Hut 8 partnership is central to this layer. Our primary facility at Vega draws 205 MW from the ERCOT grid and an adjacent wind farm, with direct-to-chip liquid cooling supporting up to 180 kW per rack. It is purpose-built for high-density Bitcoin computes. Hut 8 invests in the infrastructure stack, American Bitcoin invests in ASICs and Bitcoin. That separation of capital responsibilities is designed to align incentives and support efficient scaling over time. Our objective with mining is to produce Bitcoin below market costs. In turn, our objective with the treasury is to further grow that Bitcoin position. Together, they form what we call our dual accumulation model. As of December 31st, we held 5,401 Bitcoin in reserve, up from 3,418 at the end of the third quarter. We accumulated through mining production as well as at-market purchases and strategic transactions. The mix of our total reserve is roughly one-third mined, two-thirds purchased. The result is a reserve built through both operational output and balance sheet activity. As of year-end, we had raised approximately $240 million in gross proceeds under our at-the-market program, or about 11% of total capacity. That disciplined utilization is intentional. We deploy capital when we believe it strengthens for sure Bitcoin ownership. Unlike pure treasury vehicles that accumulate at spot, our model first produces Bitcoin at a structural discount and then expands the position through treasury activity. As Bitcoin matures as an institutional asset class, we believe there is significant value in becoming an institutional-grade interface to Bitcoin, a platform that combines production economics, treasury scale, and operational credibility. We remain focused on Bitcoin. We're not pursuing business lines that would dilute that focus. The companies that earn durable premiums are the ones that clearly define their mandate and execute against it consistently. We intend to be one of those companies. As we scale, we are continuing to build the operational depth and the internal systems necessary to support a larger platform, ensuring our structure evolves alongside the business. This quarter was defined by execution. In a volatile Bitcoin price environment, we expanded revenue and preserved balance sheet strength without compromising our long-term strategy. As a reminder, prior to March 31st, 2025, American Bitcoin's operations were reported as the Bitcoin mining sub-segment of Hut 8's Compute segment. On March 31st, 2025, Hut 8 contributed substantially all of its Bitcoin miners to American Data Centers, Inc, which was subsequently renamed American Bitcoin Corp. On September 3rd, 2025, American Bitcoin completed a stock-for-stock merger with Gryphon Digital Mining, Inc. and was deemed the accounting acquirer. As a result, financial results for periods prior to March 31st, 2025, reflect operations as part of Hut 8 and are not directly comparable to standalone periods. With that context, let me turn to our financial results. Revenue for the fourth quarter was $78.3 million, up 22% sequentially from $64.2 million in the third quarter, and full-year revenue was $185.2 million. While revenue provides scale context, we focus more closely on margin profile, production efficiency, and reserve growth as the primary indicators of performance. Against that backdrop, margins provide a clearer view of underlying operating performance. Cost of revenue for the fourth quarter was $36.7 million, up from $28.3 million in the third quarter. Overall cost of revenue for the 12 months ended December 31st, 2025, was $92 million. Gross margin was approximately 53% in the fourth quarter, compared to 56% in the third quarter, and approximately 50% for the year overall. Gross margin was 49% in the second quarter before improving to 56% in the third quarter as earlier capacity stabilized. During the fourth quarter, the price of Bitcoin declined approximately 23%, resulting in a non-cash fair value adjustment reflected separately on the income statement. That adjustment did not affect gross margin, which continued to reflect the operating economics of the mining business. Stepping back, the fourth quarter results reflect a business that maintained operating discipline and margin integrity despite volatility in Bitcoin's market price. G&A was $7.3 million in the fourth quarter, down from $8.1 million in the third quarter. For the full year of 2025, G&A totaled $33.4 million. As a percentage of revenue, G&A declined to approximately 9% in the fourth quarter from 13% in the third quarter. Revenue grew 22%, while G&A dollars declined. That is operating leverage. Turning to the bottom line, net income or loss reflects the impact of non-cash fair value accounting adjustments during the quarter. Under current accounting standards, changes in the market price of Bitcoin between quarter end dates flow through the income statement as a fair value adjustment. Therefore, net loss for the fourth quarter was $59.5 million, driven primarily by a $112.2 million non-cash loss on digital assets. Net loss for the 12 months ended December 31st, 2025, was $153.2 million. To be clear, this is not a cash event. We did not sell Bitcoin. Operationally, the business generated positive contribution before those non-cash accounting effects, and the underlying Mining and Treasury economics remained healthy throughout the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was negative $77.6 million for the fourth quarter, and negative $157.3 million for the full year. Those figures include an impact of non-cash digital asset fair value adjustments. Looking ahead, our priorities are clear. We continue to focus on optimizing fleet efficiency. Improvements in joules per terahash can enhance Bitcoin production economics and support margin performance over time. We remain focused on disciplined capacity expansion. We have access to additional capacity and to next-generation ASICs technology. We will deploy when we believe the investment returns more Bitcoin over its useful life than it costs in Bitcoin terms. We would rather be right than be first. We continue to compound the reserve through mining and strategic purchases, and we continue to reinforce the three-layer architecture. Layer 1 provides production economics. Layer 2 compounds the division. Layer 3 positions this company to the next phase of institutional adoption. Each layer strengthens the others. This company launched less than a year ago. In that time, we believe we have built a revenue model that scales, a reserve that compounds, a margin profile that held through a meaningful decline in Bitcoin, and an organizational foundation that is ready for the next phase. We have done it with a lean cost structure and a clear framework for how we allocate every dollar. The majority of our operations are anchored in the United States, powered predominantly by American energy, and built in communities that benefit from our presence. We're focused on Bitcoin, we're focused on execution, and we are building something durable. I want to thank our shareholders, our partners at Hut 8, and the entire American Bitcoin team. Operator, we will now open the line for questions.